DEV Community

Codego Group
Codego Group

Posted on • Originally published at news.codegotech.com

Stablecoins and AI Reshape Asia's Fintech Agenda at Money20/20

Money20/20 Asia concluded its Bangkok gathering in late April with a milestone few regional fintech conferences can claim: attendance surged 40 percent year-over-year to exceed 4,500 delegates, drawn from 90 countries across three days of programming that crystallized two dominant themes reshaping the continent's financial infrastructure. The event, now in its third iteration in Thailand, has become more than a networking bazaar for venture capitalists and startup founders. It has evolved into a de facto policy forum where the region's banking establishment, regulators, and technology pioneers negotiate the shape of financial systems to come.

The headlining topics tell a revealing story about where Asia's financial sector perceives the momentum to be—and where global capital expects the next generation of competitive advantage to emerge. Stablecoins and artificial intelligence dominated the conversation floor, reflected in speaker lineups that exceeded 360 across more than 100 hours of sessions. Neither subject is novel to fintech discourse, yet the scale of institutional attention devoted to both signals a maturation in how seriously Asia's financial decision-makers treat digital-asset rails and machine-driven financial services. This is not speculative venture-stage material anymore. Banks, payment networks, and regulators are plotting roadmaps that assume both technologies will be foundational, not peripheral, to the region's financial plumbing.

The stablecoin focus arrives at a critical juncture for Asia's payment infrastructure. The region's heterogeneity—fragmented across dozens of currencies, regulatory regimes, and banking systems—has long been a friction point for cross-border commerce and remittance flows. Traditional correspondent banking, decades old and expensive, still dominates remittance corridors from Southeast Asia to the Middle East and beyond. Stablecoins, particularly those pegged to major reserve currencies or multi-currency baskets, offer a technological lever to bypass intermediate settlement layers. The appeal is especially acute in Southeast Asia, where informal remittance channels still handle substantial flows and where banking infrastructure varies widely in sophistication. A stable digital asset that can move across borders in minutes rather than days, without requiring a banking relationship in both jurisdictions, directly addresses a persistent regional pain point. This is why the conversation has migrated from academic curiosity to operational necessity in Money20/20 agendas.

The parallel emphasis on artificial intelligence reflects a different but complementary imperative. Asia's financial services sector has long competed on volume and speed rather than on institutional brand power alone. Machine learning and large language models promise to reshape customer acquisition, risk assessment, and operational efficiency in ways that may compress the cost advantages that have historically favored larger incumbent institutions. A regional bank in Manila or Jakarta can now deploy AI-driven underwriting that rivals JPMorgan's models at a fraction of the infrastructure cost. For incumbent players, AI represents a challenge to profitability but also an opportunity to rationalize legacy costs. For fintechs and smaller regional players, it democratizes access to sophisticated financial tooling. Money20/20's platform gave those competing perspectives space to crystallize into policy and product strategy.

What makes this convergence significant is the institutional bandwidth devoted to it. Major payment networks, regional development banks, and national financial regulators do not commit 360 speakers and multinational sponsorship to technologies they regard as peripheral. The sheer attendance growth—from fewer than 3,200 delegates in 2024 to over 4,500 in 2026—suggests that boards and C-suites across the region have shifted from skepticism or indifference to active engagement. This is when fintech trends begin to shape real financial infrastructure, not just startup valuations.

The Bangkok venue matters too. Thailand's relative stability as a regional hub, combined with its positioning as a bridge between developed markets and the frontier economies of Indochina, makes it a natural convening point for conversations about infrastructure that must serve both sophisticated and emerging markets simultaneously. A fintech solution that works in Bangkok or Singapore must eventually reach Phnom Penh or Yangon to have meaningful regional impact. The conversation in that room is therefore not abstract; it carries real geographic, demographic, and regulatory complexity.

Asia's trajectory in digital finance will not be determined by any single conference, but Money20/20's agenda offers a window into where institutional decision-makers believe the next cycle of competitive differentiation lies. Stablecoins and artificial intelligence are not trendy because they are fashionable; they are trendy because they directly address structural inefficiencies in Asian financial systems that have persisted for decades. The region's regulators, banks, and fintechs have collectively decided that these technologies are too important to leave to venture-stage experimentation alone. The move to operational seriousness has begun.

Written by the editorial team — independent journalism powered by Pressnow.

Top comments (0)